
Only Connect viewers left seriously distracted by BBC contestant's outfit - gasping 'I'm surprised the costume team allowed it!'
The most recent instalment of the BBC show, hosted by Victoria Coren Mitchell, saw the Metrophiles take on the Grapevines.
One player, named Pam Cooke, got fans talking about her chosen attire for the programme.
The IT programme manager opted for a fuchsia pink blazer, matching blouse and a stunning gold and pink jewel necklace.
If that wasn't enough of the same colour, she rocked bright pink hair and a matching lip.
But those watching at home flocked to X, formerly known as Twitter, to share their confusion over the outfit.
One player, named Pam Cooke, got fans talking about her chosen attire for the programme (pictured)
'Surprised the costume team allowed that pink suit against that background #onlyconnect.'
'Jeez Has something gone wrong with my colour balance??'
'I find the outfits on this show to be so over the top sometimes and it's a bit distracting. They should have a wardrobe policy or something? #onlyconnect.'
'Giving me a headache - too much!'
Unfortunately Pam's team didn't manage to bag the top spot.
At the end of the episode Victoria told them: 'That is the end of the quiz. Looking at the final scores... the winners with 23 points are the Metrophiles.
'Very well played.
'Grapevines you finish on 19, very well played you two.
'We will of course see you later on in the series as you have another go at making your way to the next round.
Many viewers rushed to X, formerly known as Twitter, to say the same thing about Pam Cooke's outfit
'Metrophiles you are already there.'
It comes after Only Connect viewers fumed 'standards are slipping!' after calling out a question blunder just minutes into the BBC quiz.
In a recent episode Victoria asked one of the teams: 'What is the connection between these apparently random picture clues?'
A picture of British snooker player Ronnie O'Sullivan, also known as The Rocket, appeared on screen.
This was swiftly followed by an image of Marvel comic book character Rocket Raccoon.
The players were quick to spot the connection between the two was 'rocket', with Victoria soon confirming they were correct.
She revealed the last two images they would have been shown to help them to get to the answer.
These were a sketch of the early steam train Stephenson's Rocket, built nearly 200 years ago, and a photo of some rocket salad leaves.
The last two images they would have been shown to help them to get to the answer included a sketch of the early steam train Stephenson's Rocket (pictured)
But viewers at home were adamant the sketch did not show Stephenson's Rocket - but rather another steam locomotive.
One suggested it could be Puffing Billy - the oldest train of its kind, constructed by a colliery in 1814 near Newcastle-upon-Tyne for hauling coal.
Meanwhile, another was determined it was Locomotion No 1, a different early steam train built by the same engineers as Stephenson's Rocket.
While Robert Stephenson and Company - also Newcastle-based - built the Rocket in 1829, Locomotion No 1 was built four years prior, in 1825.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


ITV News
23 minutes ago
- ITV News
Gary Lineker to host new ITV show The Box after leaving Match of the Day
Former Match Of The Day host Gary Lineker said he "can't wait" to present a new ITV game show after his exit from the BBC. The former footballer, 64, who left the BBC One sports show in May, will host The Box, a new game show which will air on ITV in 2026. In the show, 10 yellow boxes house a celebrity contestant who will be transported to unknown locations, before being released to face whatever game awaits on the other side of the door. Each week two players will face The Duel, a finale in which the loser leaves the competition for good. Lineker hosted Match of The Day since 1999 until May 2 this year where he made an emotional goodbye. His early departure followed a social media row in which he reshared a post about Zionism featuring a rat, a historically an anti-semitic symbol. He made an unreserved apology in a video on social media and announcing his depature from the BBC where he was the highest-paid presenter. Lineker said: 'I can't wait to host The Box. I've always felt right at home in the box on a football pitch and whilst this is a different proposition, the fundamentals are similar." 'The contestants will have to quickly and masterfully work out how each game works, whilst also trying to get ahead of the competition to take control." 'It's going to be unpredictable and thrilling to watch, and I'm excited that I get to have a front row seat to all the action.' Katie Rawcliffe, director of entertainment, reality and daytime commissioning at ITV, said: 'Gary is the perfect fit for The Box, an entertaining, exhilarating and immersive new format.' Dan Adamson, chief content officer at production company Twofour, added: 'From the first time we saw those iconic yellow boxes open in an incredible location we were hooked. Now, with Gary on board, we have the ideal master of ceremonies to make this real event telly, he is after all a man who knows what it's like under pressure in the box. 'He's sure to raise the competitive spirit as our cast bursts out of those boxes, into unknown, ambitious and spectacular challenges.' The Box was first launched on TV2 in Norway in January, with the UK version being filmed later this year and will air in 2026.


Daily Mirror
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
BBC The One Show halted as guest Richard Osman replaces Alex Jones on air
The One Show's Alex Jones has been left gobsmacked during tonight's episode on the BBC series - with guest Richard Osman announcing that he would be taking over from her for the rest of the show. Tonight's episode celebrates Alex Jones' 15th anniversary on The One Show and to celebrate, co-host Roman Kemp decided to surprise her by making her the guest for once. While Alex thought that Richard Osman had come on the show to talk about The Thursday Murder Club's upcoming film, he quickly revealed that he would be swapping places with Alex so they could look back through her career.


Telegraph
24 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Coe's Royal faux pas
Princess Anne will celebrate her 75th birthday next Friday on a small yacht off the west coast of Scotland with her husband Sir Tim Laurence. Two of her favourite hobbies are lighthouse-watching and horseracing. Lord Coe, who sings her praises for her work with the International Olympic Committee and Team GB, once had the bright idea of inviting her to an away-day he had arranged as a 'breather' for those working on the London 2012 bid – and committed an inadvertent faux pas with the princess. She dutifully came along to his away day in Weymouth, but told him afterwards: 'If you ever book another meeting on the day of the Cheltenham Gold Cup, we're going to fall out.' 'Noted', Lord Coe told her. He now concedes: 'It wasn't my finest career moment'. Williamson pet project Sir Gavin Williamson's departure from frontbench politics has left him more time to pursue personal campaigns, including his advocacy for the people of Somaliland. He loves the territory and believes it should be an independent state. I hear the warm feelings are mutual, and one fan there has named their camel after him. Sir Gavin is flattered, but surprised. 'It's the first I've heard of it,' he said. Poodling Farage Some of Britain's opposition leaders are taking their minds off Westminster this summer with a rather obscure selection of historical reading material. Nigel Farage has bought a copy of Roy Jenkins's Mr Balfour's Poodle, which recounts the battle between Liberal politicians and the House of Lords between 1909 and 1911, while Ed Davey is reading a history of 1960s raves in his constituency of Richmond-upon-Thames. Only Kemi Badenoch has gone more mainstream, with the bestselling novel My Brilliant Friend, which is now an HBO TV series. Lighten up, boys! Colesian puddles Touring up and down the land, celebrity vicar and bestselling author the Rev Richard Coles reveals past sins can catch up with him on the road. 'It was in Bury St Edmunds, when someone asked me why I had pushed her over in a puddle at preschool in Kettering in 1967,' he says. 'I had completely forgotten about it until that moment.' He clarifies, almost 60 years on: 'There was no particular reason – I just saw an opportunity and took it.' Dinsmore's dosh Eyebrows have been raised in Whitehall over the exorbitant cost of hiring the former Sun editor David Dinsmore to be the Government's new communications chief. Contracts published by the Cabinet Office show bringing him in for an interview with Sir Keir Starmer cost the taxpayer £46,000 in fees to recruiters. Dinsmore is one of Britain's best-known newspaper executives. Didn't anyone have his mobile number? Lucy dresses the part Sir Keir Starmer is in hot water over freebies again after his wife Victoria accepted tickets to Ascot, but others have not been so lucky. Lucy Powell, the Leader of the Commons, paid a painful £350 for her ticket to the Oasis reunion tour last week, plus an extra £35 on a trademark Liam Gallagher bucket hat to wear. 'The Gallaghers went to the Catholic high school next to mine and Liam was a contemporary,' the Mancunian MP says. 'The merch is essential!' Vintage Gilmour David Gilmour remembers little of one of his first shows with Pink Floyd, at the Winter Gardens Pavilion in Weston-super-Mare in 1968. Perhaps that is due to a pre-gig tipple. 'My main memory is not music-related,' he told Record Collector magazine. 'We set up and went out to a French restaurant. The bottle of wine that they brought us was so delicious that it fixed my red wine tastes forever more. It was a 1964 red Burgundy, Côte de Beaune.' Leicestershire Bigfoot There was some tittering in Labour HQ this week when Reform UK unveiled Rupert Matthews, the Leicestershire Police and Crime Commissioner, as their latest defection from the Tories. Matthews is a well-respected politician, but moonlights as an author of 'non-fiction' books about Bigfoot sightings. 'The evidence for its existence falls short of proof, but the balance of probabilities would suggest that there is such a creature,' he wrote in 2014. Maybe keep that to yourself on the doorstep, Rupert. Peterborough, published every Friday at 7pm, is usually edited by Christopher Hope. This week Tony Diver stands in for him. You can reach Mr Hope at peterborough@